
Life Without the Boring Bits
Condition: SECONDHAND
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only.
Author: Colleen McCullough
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 384
Intimately personal memoir, reflections on life and observations on modern society from Australian national treasure, Dr Colleen McCullough. World-famous writer and national treasure Colleen McCullough has always resisted the idea of writing an autobiography - books on the subject of the self tend to be "stuffed to pussy's bow with boring bits". But her mind has a life of its own. Here, finally, is its portrait. Among the personal reminiscences and thought-provoking musings in Life Without the Boring Bits lie clues as to the shaping of this extraordinary mind: the confused, impulsive, thoughtlessly cruel mother; the miserly absentee father; the far-reaching effects bureaucrats can have on the lives of strangers; the riddle of time ... Colleen's mind laughs at life. It cries at life. Its memory is phenomenal, its appetite for new knowledge insatiable. And though it holds the secrets to how the books were written, this is a mind that can tell stories against itself and see things that were never there. If Colleen McCullough has any lesson to teach in Life Without the Boring Bits, it is that nothing above, below, or on the surface of the Earth can keep a good mind down, let alone break it. Colleen McCullough was born in western New South Wales in 1937. A neuroscientist by training, she worked in various Sydney and English hospitals before settling into ten years of research and teaching in the Department of Neurology at the Yale Medical School in the USA. In 1974 her first novel, tim, was published in New York, followed by the bestselling the thorn Birds in 1977 and a string of successful novels, including the acclaimed Masters of Rome series. In 1980 she settled on Norfolk Island, where she lives with her husband, Ric Robinson, and a cat named Shady. "It's no fun to be a bluestocking in a family full of jockstraps." Colleen McCullough
Author: Colleen McCullough
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 384
Intimately personal memoir, reflections on life and observations on modern society from Australian national treasure, Dr Colleen McCullough. World-famous writer and national treasure Colleen McCullough has always resisted the idea of writing an autobiography - books on the subject of the self tend to be "stuffed to pussy's bow with boring bits". But her mind has a life of its own. Here, finally, is its portrait. Among the personal reminiscences and thought-provoking musings in Life Without the Boring Bits lie clues as to the shaping of this extraordinary mind: the confused, impulsive, thoughtlessly cruel mother; the miserly absentee father; the far-reaching effects bureaucrats can have on the lives of strangers; the riddle of time ... Colleen's mind laughs at life. It cries at life. Its memory is phenomenal, its appetite for new knowledge insatiable. And though it holds the secrets to how the books were written, this is a mind that can tell stories against itself and see things that were never there. If Colleen McCullough has any lesson to teach in Life Without the Boring Bits, it is that nothing above, below, or on the surface of the Earth can keep a good mind down, let alone break it. Colleen McCullough was born in western New South Wales in 1937. A neuroscientist by training, she worked in various Sydney and English hospitals before settling into ten years of research and teaching in the Department of Neurology at the Yale Medical School in the USA. In 1974 her first novel, tim, was published in New York, followed by the bestselling the thorn Birds in 1977 and a string of successful novels, including the acclaimed Masters of Rome series. In 1980 she settled on Norfolk Island, where she lives with her husband, Ric Robinson, and a cat named Shady. "It's no fun to be a bluestocking in a family full of jockstraps." Colleen McCullough
Description
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only.
Author: Colleen McCullough
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 384
Intimately personal memoir, reflections on life and observations on modern society from Australian national treasure, Dr Colleen McCullough. World-famous writer and national treasure Colleen McCullough has always resisted the idea of writing an autobiography - books on the subject of the self tend to be "stuffed to pussy's bow with boring bits". But her mind has a life of its own. Here, finally, is its portrait. Among the personal reminiscences and thought-provoking musings in Life Without the Boring Bits lie clues as to the shaping of this extraordinary mind: the confused, impulsive, thoughtlessly cruel mother; the miserly absentee father; the far-reaching effects bureaucrats can have on the lives of strangers; the riddle of time ... Colleen's mind laughs at life. It cries at life. Its memory is phenomenal, its appetite for new knowledge insatiable. And though it holds the secrets to how the books were written, this is a mind that can tell stories against itself and see things that were never there. If Colleen McCullough has any lesson to teach in Life Without the Boring Bits, it is that nothing above, below, or on the surface of the Earth can keep a good mind down, let alone break it. Colleen McCullough was born in western New South Wales in 1937. A neuroscientist by training, she worked in various Sydney and English hospitals before settling into ten years of research and teaching in the Department of Neurology at the Yale Medical School in the USA. In 1974 her first novel, tim, was published in New York, followed by the bestselling the thorn Birds in 1977 and a string of successful novels, including the acclaimed Masters of Rome series. In 1980 she settled on Norfolk Island, where she lives with her husband, Ric Robinson, and a cat named Shady. "It's no fun to be a bluestocking in a family full of jockstraps." Colleen McCullough
Author: Colleen McCullough
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 384
Intimately personal memoir, reflections on life and observations on modern society from Australian national treasure, Dr Colleen McCullough. World-famous writer and national treasure Colleen McCullough has always resisted the idea of writing an autobiography - books on the subject of the self tend to be "stuffed to pussy's bow with boring bits". But her mind has a life of its own. Here, finally, is its portrait. Among the personal reminiscences and thought-provoking musings in Life Without the Boring Bits lie clues as to the shaping of this extraordinary mind: the confused, impulsive, thoughtlessly cruel mother; the miserly absentee father; the far-reaching effects bureaucrats can have on the lives of strangers; the riddle of time ... Colleen's mind laughs at life. It cries at life. Its memory is phenomenal, its appetite for new knowledge insatiable. And though it holds the secrets to how the books were written, this is a mind that can tell stories against itself and see things that were never there. If Colleen McCullough has any lesson to teach in Life Without the Boring Bits, it is that nothing above, below, or on the surface of the Earth can keep a good mind down, let alone break it. Colleen McCullough was born in western New South Wales in 1937. A neuroscientist by training, she worked in various Sydney and English hospitals before settling into ten years of research and teaching in the Department of Neurology at the Yale Medical School in the USA. In 1974 her first novel, tim, was published in New York, followed by the bestselling the thorn Birds in 1977 and a string of successful novels, including the acclaimed Masters of Rome series. In 1980 she settled on Norfolk Island, where she lives with her husband, Ric Robinson, and a cat named Shady. "It's no fun to be a bluestocking in a family full of jockstraps." Colleen McCullough

Life Without the Boring Bits